Lord Colambre had waited with great impatience for an answer to
the letter of inquiry which he had written about Miss Nugent's
mother. A letter from Lady Clonbrony arrived; he opened it with
the greatest eagerness--passed over
'Rheumatism warm weather--warm bath--Buxton balls--Miss
Broadhurst--your friend, Sir Arthur Berryl, very assiduous!' The
name of Grace Nugent he found at last, and read as follows:
Her mother's maiden name was St. Omar; and there was a faux pas,
certainly. She was, I am told (for it was before my time),
educated at a convent abroad; and there was an affair with a
Captain Reynolds, a young officer, which her friends were obliged
to hush up. She brought an infant to England with her, and took
the name of Reynolds--but none of that family would acknowledge
her; and she lived in great obscurity, till your uncle Nugent
saw, fell in love with her, and (knowing her whole history)
married her. He adopted the child, gave her his name, and, after
some years, the whole story was forgotten. Nothing could be more
disadvantageous to Grace than to have it revived: this is the
reason we kept it secret.
From the perturbation which Lady Dashfort saw in his countenance,
she guessed the nature of the letter which he had been reading,
and for the arrival of which he had been so impatient.
'It has worked!' said she to herself. 'Pour le coup Philippe je
te tiens!'
Lord Colambre appeared this day more sensible, than he bad ever
yet seemed, to the charms of the fair Isabel.
'Many a tennis-ball, and many a heart is caught at the rebound,'
said Lady Dashfort. 'Isabel! now is your time!'
And so it was--or so, perhaps, it would have been, but for a
circumstance which her ladyship, with all her genius for
intrigue, had never taken into her consideration. Count
O'Halloran came to return the visit which had been paid to him;
and, in the course of conversation, he spoke of the officers who
had been introduced to him, and told Lady Dashfort that he had
heard a report which shocked him much--he hoped it could not be
true--that one of these officers had introduced his mistress as
his wife to Lady Oranmore, who lived in the neighbourhood. This
officer, it was said, had let Lady Oranmore send her carriage for
this woman; and that she had dined at Oranmore with her ladyship
and her daughters. [Fact.] "But I cannot believe it! I cannot
believe it to be possible, that any gentleman, that any officer,
could do such a thing!' said the count.
'And is this all?' exclaimed Lady Dashfort. 'Is this all the
terrible affair, my good count, which has brought your face to
this prodigious length?'
The count looked at Lady Dashfort with astonishment.
'Such a look of virtuous indignation,' continued she, 'did I
never behold, on or off the stage. Forgive me for laughing,
count; but, believe me, comedy goes through the world better than
tragedy, and, take it all in all, does rather less mischief. As
to the thing in question, I know nothing about it: I dare say,
it is not true; but, now, suppose it was--it is only a silly
quiz, of a raw young officer, upon a prudish old dowager. I know
nothing about it, for my part; but, after all, what irreparable
mischief has been done? Laugh at the thing, and then it is a
jest--a bad one, perhaps, but still only a jest--and there's an
end of it; but take it seriously, and there is no knowing where
it might end--in half a dozen duels, maybe.'
'Of that, madam,' said the count, 'Lady Oranmore's prudence and
presence of mind have prevented all danger. Her ladyship would
not understand the insult. She said, or she acted as if she
said, "Je ne veux rien voir, rien ecouter, rien savoir." Lady
Oranmore is one of the most respectable--'
'Count, I beg your pardon!' interrupted Lady Dashfort; 'but I
must tell you that your favourite, Lady Oranmore, has behaved
very ill to me; purposely omitted to invite Isabel to her ball;
offended and insulted me:--her praises, therefore, cannot be the
most agreeable subject of conversation you can choose for my
amusement; and as to the rest, you, who have such variety and so
much politeness, will, I am sure, have the goodness to indulge my
caprice in this instance.'
I shall obey your ladyship, and be silent, whatever pleasure it
might give me to speak on that subject,' said the count; 'and I
trust Lady Dashfort will reward me by the assurance that, however
playfully she may have just now spoken, she seriously disapproves
and is shocked.'
'Oh, shocked! shocked to death! if that will satisfy you, my
dear count.'
The count, obviously, was not satisfied; he had civil, as well as
military courage, and his sense of right and wrong could stand
against the raillery and ridicule of a fine lady.
The conversation ended: Lady Dashfort thought it would have no
further consequences; and she did not regret the loss of a man
like Count O'Halloran, who lived retired in his castle, and who
could not have any influence upon the opinion of the fashionable
world. However, upon turning from the count to Lord Colambre,
who she thought had been occupied with Lady Isabel, and to whom
she imagined all this dispute was uninteresting, she perceived,
by his countenance, that she had made a great mistake. Still she
trusted that her power over Lord Colambre was sufficient easily
to efface whatever unfavourable impression this conversation had
made upon his mind. He had no personal interest in the affair;
and she had generally found that people are easily satisfied
about any wrong or insult, public or private, in which they have
no immediate concern. But all the charms of her conversation
were now tried in vain to reclaim him from the reverie into which
he had fallen.
His friend Sir James Brooke's parting advice occurred to our
hero; his eyes began to open to Lady Dashfort's character; and he
was, from this moment, freed from her power. Lady Isabel,
however, had taken no part in all this--she was blameless; and,
independently of her mother, and in pretended opposition of
sentiment, she might have continued to retain the influence she
had gained over Lord Colambre, but that a slight accident
revealed to him her real disposition.
It happened, on the evening of this day, that Lady Isabel came
into the library with one of the young ladies of the house,
talking very eagerly, without perceiving Lord Colambre, who was
sitting in one of the recesses reading.
'My dear creature, you are quite mistaken,' said Lady Isabel, 'he
was never a favourite of mine; I always detested him; I only
flirted with him to plague his wife. Oh that wife, my dear
Elizabeth, I do hate!' cried she, clasping her hands, and
expressing hatred with all her soul and with all her strength.
'I detest that Lady de Cresey to such a degree, that, to purchase
the pleasure of making her feel the pangs of jealousy for one
hour, look, I would this moment lay down this finger and let it
be cut off.'
The face, the whole figure of Lady Isabel at this moment appeared
to Lord Colambre suddenly metamorphosed; instead of the soft,
gentle, amiable female, all sweet charity and tender sympathy,
formed to love and to be loved, he beheld one possessed and
convulsed by an evil spirit--her beauty, if beauty it could be
called, the beauty of a fiend. Some ejaculation, which he
unconsciously uttered, made Lady Isabel start. She saw him--saw
the expression of his countenance, and knew that all was over.
Lord Colambre, to the utter astonishment and disappointment of
Lady Dashfort, and to the still greater mortification of Lady
Isabel, announced this night that it was necessary he should
immediately pursue his tour in Ireland. We pass over all the
castles in the air which the young ladies of the family had
built, and which now fell to the ground. We pass all the civil
speeches of Lord and Lady Killpatrick; all the vehement
remonstrances of Lady Dashfort; and the vain sighs of Lady
Isabel, To the last moment Lady Dashfort said--
But he went; and, when he was gone, Lady Dashfort exclaimed,
'That man has escaped from me.' And after a pause, turning to
her daughter, she, in the most taunting and contemptuous terms,
reproached her as the cause of this failure, concluding by a
declaration that she must in future manage her own affairs, and
had best settle her mind to marry Heathcock, since every one else
was too wise to think of her.
Lady Isabel of course retorted. But we leave this amiable mother
and daughter to recriminate in appropriate terms, and we follow
our hero, rejoiced that he has been disentangled from their
snares. Those who have never been in similar peril will wonder
much that he did not escape sooner; those who have ever been in
like danger will wonder more that he escaped at all. Those who
are best acquainted with the heart or imagination of man will be
most ready to acknowledge that the combined charms of wit,
beauty, and flattery, may, for a time, suspend the action of
right reason in the mind of the greatest philosopher, or operate
against the resolutions of the greatest of heroes.
Lord Colambre pursued his way to Castle Halloran, desirous,
before he quitted this part of the country, to take leave of the
count, who had shown him much civility, and for whose honourable
conduct, and generous character, he had conceived a high esteem,
which no little peculiarities of antiquated dress or manner could
diminish. Indeed, the old-fashioned politeness of what was
formerly called a well-bred gentleman pleased him better than the
indolent or insolent selfishness of modern men of the ton.
Perhaps, notwithstanding our hero's determination to turn his
mind from everything connected with the idea of Miss Nugent, some
latent curiosity about the burial-place of the Nugents might have
operated to make him call upon the count. In this hope he was
disappointed; for a cross miller to whom the abbey-ground was
set, on which the burial-place was found, had taken it into his
head to refuse admittance, and none could enter his ground.
Count O'Halloran was much pleased by Lord Colambre's visit. The
very day of Lord Colambre's arrival at Halloran Castle, the count
was going to Oranmore; he was dressed, and his carriage was
waiting; therefore Lord Colambre begged that he might not detain
him, and the count requested his lordship to accompany him.
'Let me have the honour of introducing you, my lord, to a family,
with whom, I am persuaded, you will be pleased; by whom you will
be appreciated; and at whose house you will have an opportunity
of seeing the best manner of living of the Irish nobility.' Lord
Colambre accepted the invitation, and was introduced at Oranmore.
The dignified appearance and respectable character of Lady
Oranmore; the charming unaffected manners of her daughters; the
air of domestic happiness and comfort in her family; the
becoming magnificence, free from ostentation, in her whole
establishment; the respect and affection with which she was
treated by all who approached her, delighted and touched Lord
Colambre; the more, perhaps, because he had heard this family so
unjustly abused; and because he saw Lady Oranmore and her
daughter, in immediate contrast to Lady Dashfort and Lady
Isabel.'
A little circumstance which occurred during this visit increased
his interest for the family, When Lady de Cresey's little boys
came in after dinner, one of them was playing with a seal, which
had just been torn from a letter. The child showed it to Lord
Colambre, and asked him to read the motto. The motto was,'Deeds,
not words'--his friend Sir James Brooke's motto, and his arms.
Lord Colambre eagerly inquired if this family was acquainted with
Sir James, and he soon perceived that they were not only
acquainted with him, but that they were particularly interested
about him.
Lady Oranmore's second daughter, Lady Harriet, appeared
particularly pleased by the manner in which Lord Colambre spoke
of Sir James. And the child, who had now established himself on
his lordship's knee, turned round, and whispered in his ear,
''Twas Aunt Harriet gave me the seal; Sir James is to be married
to Aunt Harriet, and then he will be my uncle.'
Some of the principal gentry of this part of the country happened
to dine at Oranmore one of the days Lord Colambre was there. He
was surprised at the discovery, that there were so many
agreeable, well-informed, and well-bred people, of whom, while he
was at Killpatrickstown, he had seen nothing. He now discerned
how far he had been deceived by Lady Dashfort.
Both the count, and Lord and Lady Oranmore, who were warmly
attached to their country, exhorted him to make himself amends
for the time he had lost, by seeing with his own eyes, and
judging with his own understanding, of the country and its own
inhabitants, during the remainder of the time he was to stay in
Ireland. The higher classes, in most countries, they observed
were generally similar; but, in the lower class, he would find
many characteristic differences.
When he first came to Ireland, he had been very eager to go and
see his father's estate, and to judge of the conduct of his
agents, and the condition of his tenantry; but this eagerness had
subsided, and the design had almost faded from his mind, whilst
under the influence of Lady Dashfort's misrepresentations. A
mistake, relative to some remittance from his banker in Dublin,
obliged him to delay his journey a few days, and during that time
Lord and Lady Oranmore showed him the neat cottages, the well-
attended schools, in their neighbourhood. They showed him not
only what could be done, but what had been done, by the influence
of great proprietors residing on their own estates, and
encouraging the people by judicious kindness.
He saw, he acknowledged the truth of this; but it did not come
home to his feelings now as it would have done a little while
ago. His views and plans were altered; he looked forward to the
idea of marrying and settling in Ireland, and then everything in
the country was interesting to him; but since he had forbidden
himself to think of a union with Miss Nugent, his mind had lost
its object and its spring; he was not sufficiently calm to think
of the public good; his thoughts were absorbed by his private
concern. He knew, and repeated to himself, that he ought to
visit his own and his father's estates, and to see the condition
of his tenantry; he desired to fulfil his duties, but they ceased
to appear to him easy and pleasurable, for hope and love no
longer brightened his prospects.
That he might see and hear more than he could as heir-apparent to
the estate, he sent his servant to Dublin to wait for him there.
He travelled incognito, wrapped himself in a shabby greatcoat,
and took the name of Evans. He arrived at a village, or, as it
was called, a town, which bore the name of Colambre. He was
agreeably surprised by the air of neat--ness and finish in the
houses and in the street, which had a nicely-swept paved footway.
He slept at a small but excellent inn--excellent, perhaps,
because it was small, and proportioned to the situation and
business of the place. Good supper, good bed, good attendance;
nothing out of repair; no things pressed into services for what
they were never intended by nature or art; none of what are
vulgarly called make-shifts. No chambermaid slipshod, or waiter
smelling of whisky; but all tight and right, and everybody doing
their own business, and doing it as if it was their everyday
occupation, not as if it was done by particular desire, for first
or last time this season. The landlord came in at supper to
inquire whether anything was wanted. Lord Colambre took this
opportunity of entering into conversation with him, and asked him
to whom the town belonged, and who were the proprietors of the
neighbouring estates.
'The town belongs to an absentee lord--one Lord Clonbrony, who
lives always beyond the seas, in London; and never seen the town
since it was a town, to call a town.'
'And does the land in the neighbourhood belong to this Lord
Clonbrony?'
'It does, sir; he's a great proprietor, but knows nothing of his
property, nor of us. Never set foot among us, to my knowledge,
since I was as high as the table. He might as well be a West
India planter, and we negroes, for anything he knows to the
contrary--has no more care, nor thought about us, than if he were
in Jamaica, or the other world. Shame for him!--But there's too
many to keep him in countenance.'
Lord Colambre asked him what wine he could have; and then
inquired who managed the estate for this absentee.
'Mr. Burke, sir. And I don't know why God was so kind to give so
good an agent to an absentee like Lord Clonbrony, except it was
for the sake of us, who is under him, and knows the blessing, and
is thankful for the same.'
'He is, thanks be to Heaven! And that's what few can boast,
especially when the landlord's living over the seas: we have the
luck to have got a good agent over us, in Mr. Burke, who is a
right bred gentleman; a snug little property of his own, honestly
made; with the good will and good wishes, and respect of all.'
'Justconvanient [convenient: near.] At the end of the town;
in the house on the hill, as you passed, sir; to the left, with
the trees about it, all of his planting, finely grown too--for
there's a blessing on all he does, and he has done a deal.--
There's salad, sir, if you are partial to it. Very fine lettuce.
Mrs. Burke sent us the plants herself.'
'Excellent salad! So this Mr. Burke has done a great deal, has
he? In what way!'
'In every way, sir--sure was not it he that had improved, and
fostered, and made the town of Colambre?--no thanks to the
proprietor, nor to the young man whose name it bears, neither!'
'We have, sir, as good, I hope, as you'd drink in London, for
it's the same you get there, I understand, from Cork. And I have
some of my own brewing, which, they say, you could not tell the
difference between it and Cork quality--if you'd be pleased to
try. Harry, the corkscrew.'
The porter of his own brewing was pronounced to be extremely
good; and the landlord observed it was Mr. Burke encouraged him
to learn to brew, and lent him his own brewer for a time to teach
him.
'Your Mr. Burke, I find, is apropos to porter, apropos to salad,
apropos to cutlets, apropos to everything,' said Lord Colambre,
smiling; 'he seems to be a non-pareil of an agent. I suppose you
are a great favourite of his, and you do what you please with
him?'
'Oh no, sir, I could not say that; Mr. Burke does not have
favourites anyway; but according to my deserts, I trust, I stand
well enough with him, for, in truth, he is a right good agent.'
Lord Colambre still pressed for particulars; he was an
Englishman, and a stranger, he said, and did not exactly know
what was meant in Ireland by a good agent.
'Why, he is the man that will encourage the improving tenant; and
show no favour or affection, but justice, which comes even to
all, and does best for all at the long run; and, residing always
in the country, like Mr. Burke, and understanding country
business, and going about continually among the tenantry, he
knows when to press for the rent, and when to leave the money to
lay out upon the land; and, according as they would want it, can
give a tenant a help or a check properly. Then no duty-work
called for, no presents, nor glove-money, nor sealing-money even,
taken or offered; no underhand hints about proposals, when land
would be out of lease, but a considerable preference, if
desArved, to the old tenant, and if not, a fair advertisement,
and the best offer and tenant accepted; no screwing of the land
to the highest penny, just to please the head landlord for the
minute, and ruin him at the end, by the tenant's racking the
land, and running off with the year's rent; nor no bargains to
his own relations or friends did Mr. Burke ever give or grant,
but all fair between landlord and tenant; and that's the thing
that will last; and that's what I call the good agent.'
Lord Colambre poured out a glass of wine, and begged the
innkeeper to drink the good agent's health, in which he was
heartily pledged. 'I thank your honour;--Mr. Burke's health! and
long may he live over and amongst us; he saved me from drink and
ruin, when I was once inclined to it, and made a man of me and
all my family.'
The particulars we cannot stay to detail: this grateful man,
however, took pleasure in sounding the praises of his benefactor,
and in raising him in the opinion of the traveller.
'As you've time, and are curious about such things, sir, perhaps
you'd walk up to the school that Mrs. Burke has for the poor
children; and look at the market-house, and see how clean he
takes a pride to keep the town; and any house in the town, from
the priest to the parson's, that you'd go into, will give you the
same character as I do of Mr. Burke: from the brogue to the
boot, all speak the same of him, and can say no other. God for
ever bless and keep him over us!'
Upon making further inquiries, everything the innkeeper had said
was confirmed by different inhabitants of the village. Lord
Colambre conversed with the shopkeepers, with the cottagers; and,
without making any alarming inquiries, he obtained all the
information he wanted. He went to the village school--a pretty,
cheerful house, with a neat garden and a play-green; met Mrs.
Burke; introduced himself to her as a traveller. The school was
shown to him: it was just what it ought to be--neither too much
nor too little had been attempted; there was neither too much
interference nor too little attention. Nothing for exhibition;
care to teach well, without any vain attempt to teach in a
wonderfully short time. All that experience proves to be useful,
in both Dr. Bell's and Mr. Lancaster's modes of teaching, Mrs.
Burke had adopted; leaving it to 'graceless zealots' to fight
about the rest. That no attempts at proselytism had been made,
and that no illiberal distinctions had been made in this school,
Lord Colambre was convinced, in the best manner possible, by
seeing the children of Protestants and Catholics sitting on the
same benches, learning from the same books, and speaking to one
another with the same cordial familiarity. Mrs. Burke was an
unaffected, sensible woman, free from all party prejudices, and,
without ostentation, desirous and capable of doing good. Lord
Colambre was much pleased with her, and very glad that she
invited him to dinner.
Mr. Burke did not come in till late; for he had been detained
portioning out some meadows, which were of great consequence to
the inhabitants of the town. He brought home to dine with him
the clergyman and the priest of the parish, both of whom he had
taken successful pains to accommodate with the land which suited
their respective convenience. The good terms on which they
seemed to be with each other, and with him, appeared to Lord
Colambre to do honour to Mr. Burke. All the favourable accounts
his lordship had received of this gentleman were confirmed by
what he saw and heard. After the clergyman and priest had taken
leave, upon Lord Colambre's expressing some surprise, mixed with
satisfaction, at seeing the harmony which subsisted between them,
Mr. Burke assured him that this was the same in many parts of
Ireland. He observed, that 'as the suspicion of ill-will never
fails to produce it,' so he had often found, that taking it for
granted that no ill-will exists has the most conciliating effect.
He said, to please opposite parties, he used no arts; but he
tried to make all his neighbours live comfortably together, by
making them acquainted with each other's good qualities; by
giving them opportunities of meeting sociably, and, from time to
time, of doing each other little services and good offices.
'Fortunately, he had so much to do,' he said, 'that he had no
time for controversy. He was a plain man, made it a rule not to
meddle with speculative points, and to avoid all irritating
discussions; he was not to rule the country, but to live in it,
and make others live as happily as he could.'
Having nothing to conceal in his character, opinions, or
circumstances, Mr. Burke was perfectly open and unreserved in his
manner and conversation; freely answered all the traveller's
inquiries, and took pains to show him everything he desired to
see. Lord Colambre said he had thoughts of settling in Ireland;
and declared, with truth, that he had not seen any part of the
country he should like better to live in than this neighbourhood.
He went over most of the estate with Mr. Burke, and had ample
opportunities of convincing himself that this gentleman was
indeed, as the innkeeper had described him, 'a right good
gentleman, and a right good agent.'
He paid Mr. Burke some just compliments on the state of the
tenantry, and the neat and flourishing appearance of the town of
Colambre.
'What pleasure it will give the proprietor when he sees all you
have done!' said Lord Colambre.
'Oh, sir, don't speak of it!--that breaks my heart, he never has
shown the least interest in anything I have done; he is quite
dissatisfied with me, because I have not ruined his tenantry, by
forcing them to pay more than the land is worth; because I have
not squeezed money from them by fining down rents; and--but all
this, as an Englishman, sir, must he unintelligible to you. The
end of the matter is, that, attached as I am to this place and
the people about me, and, as I hope, the tenantry are to me--I
fear I shall be obliged to give up the agency.'
'Give up the agency! How so?--you must not,' cried Lord
Colambre, and, for the moment, he forgot himself; but Mr. Burke
took this only for an expression of good-will.
'I must, I am afraid,' continued he. 'My employer, Lord
Clonbrony, is displeased with me--continual calls for money come
upon me from England, and complaints of my slow remittances.'
'Perhaps Lord Clonbrony is in embarrassed circumstances said Lord
Colambre.
'I never speak of my employer's affairs, sir,' replied Mr. Burke;
now for the first time assuming an air of reserve.
'I beg pardon, sir--I seem to have asked an indiscreet question.'
Mrs. Burke was silent.
'Lest my reserve should give you a false impression, I will add,
sir,' resumed Mr. Burke, 'that I really am not acquainted with
the state of his lordship's affairs in general. I know only what
belongs to the estate under my own management. The principal
part of his lordship's property, the Clonbrony estate, is under
another agent, Mr. Garraghty.'
'Garraghty!' repeated Lord Colambre; 'what sort of a person is
he? But I may take it for granted, that it cannot fall to the
lot of one and the same absentee to have two such agents as Mr.
Burke.'
Mr. Burke bowed, and seemed pleased by the compliment, which he
knew he deserved--but not a word did he say of Mr. Garraghty; and
Lord Colambre, afraid of betraying himself by some other
indiscreet question, changed the conversation.
That very night the post brought a letter to Mr. Burke, from Lord
Clonbrony, which Mr. Burke gave to his wife as soon as he had
read it, saying--
Mrs. Burke glanced her eye over the letter, and, being extremely
fond of her husband, and sensible of his deserving far different
treatment, burst into indignant exclamations--
'See the reward of all your services, indeed!--What an
unreasonable, ungrateful man!--So, this is the thanks for all you
have done for Lord Clonbrony!'
'He does not know what I have done, my dear. He never has seen
what I have done.'
'Take it quietly, my dear; we have the comfort of a good
conscience. The agency may be taken from me by this lord; but
the sense of having done my duty, no lord or man upon earth can
give or take away.'
'Such a letter!' said Mrs. Burke, taking it up again. 'Not even
the civility to write with his own hand!--only his signature to
the scrawl--looks as if it was written by a drunken man, does not
it, Mr. Evans?' said she, showing the letter to Lord Colambre,
who immediately recognised the writing of Sir Terence O'Fay.
'It does not look like the hand of a gentleman, indeed,' said
Lord Colambre.
'It has Lord Clonbrony's own signature, let it be what it will,'
said Mr. Burke, looking closely at it; 'Lord Clonbrony's own
writing the signature is, I am clear of that.'
Lord Clonbrony's son was clear of it also; but he took care not
to give any opinion on that point.
'Oh, pray, read it, sir, read it,' said Mrs. Burke, pleased by
his tone of indignation; 'read it, pray; a gentleman may write a
bad hand, but no gentleman could write such a letter as that to
Mr. Burke--pray read it, sir; you who have seen something of what
Mr. Burke has done for the town of Colambre, and what he has made
of the tenantry and the estate of Lord Clonbrony.'
Lord Colambre read, and was convinced that his father had never
written or read the letter, but had signed it, trusting to Sir
Terence O'Fay's having expressed his sentiments properly.
Sir,
As I have no further occasion for your services, you will take
notice, that I hereby request you will forthwith hand over, on or
before the 1st of November next, your accounts, with the balance
due of the hanging-gale (which, I understand, is more than ought
to be at this season) to Nicholas O'Garraghty, Esq., College
Green, Dublin, who in future will act as agent, and shall get, by
post, immediately, a power of attorney for the same, entitling
him to receive and manage the Colambre as well as the Clonbrony
estate, for, Sir, your obedient
humble servant, Clonbrony.
Though misrepresentation, caprice, or interest, might have
induced Lord Clonbrony to desire to change his agent, yet Lord
Colambre knew that his father never could have announced his
wishes in such a style; and, as he returned the letter to Mrs.
Burke, he repeated, he was convinced that it was impossible that
any nobleman could have written such a letter; that it must have
been written by some inferior person; and that his lordship had
signed it without reading it.
'My dear, I'm sorry you showed that letter to Mr. Evans,' said
Mr. Burke; 'I don't like to expose Lord Clonbrony; he is a well-
meaning gentleman, misled by ignorant or designing people; at all
events, it is not for us to expose him.'
'He has exposed himself,' said Mrs. Burke; 'and the world should
know it.'
'He was very kind to me when I was a young man,' said Mr. Burke;
'we must not forget that now, because we are angry, my love.'
'Why, no, my love, to be sure we should not; but who could have
recollected it just at this minute but yourself?--And now, sir,'
turning to Lord Colambre, 'you see what kind of a man this is:
now is it not difficult for me to bear patiently to see him ill-
treated?'
'Not only difficult, but impossible, I should think, madam,' said
Lord Colambre; 'I know, even I, who am a stranger, cannot help
feeling for both of you, as you must see I do.'
'And half the world, who don't know him,' continued Mrs. Burke,
'when they hear that Lord Clonbrony's agency is taken from him,
will think, perhaps, that he is to blame.'
'No, madam,' said Lord Colambre; 'that you need not fear; Mr.
Burke may safely trust to his character; from what I have within
these two days seen and heard, I am convinced that such is the
respect he has deserved and acquired, that no blame can touch
him.'
'Sir, I thank you,' said Mrs. Burke, the tears coming into her
eyes; 'you can judge--you do him justice; but there are so many
who don't know him, and who will decide without knowing any of
the facts.'
'That, my dear, happens about everything to everybody,' said Mr.
Burke; 'but we must have patience; time sets all judgments right,
sooner or later.'
'But the sooner the better,' said Mrs. Burke. 'Mr. Evans, I hope
you will be so kind, if ever you hear this business talked of--'
But he is travelling through Ireland, my dear, and he said he
should return to Dublin, and, you know, there he certainly will
hear it talked of; and I hope he will do me the favour to state
what he has seen and knows to be the truth,'
'Be assured that I will do Mr. Burke justice--as far as it is in
my power,' said Lord Colambre, restraining himself much, that he
might not say more than became his assumed character. He took
leave of this worthy family that night, and, early the next
morning, departed.
'Ah!' thought he, as he drove away from this well-regulated and
flourishing place, 'how happy I might be, settled here with such
a wife as--her of whom I must think no more.'
He pursued his way to Clonbrony, his father's other estate, which
was at a considerable distance from Colambre; he was resolved to
know what kind of agent Mr. Nicholas Garraghty might be, who was
to supersede Mr. Burke, and by power of attorney to be immediately
entitled to receive and manage the Colambre as well as the
Clonbrony estate.